SALEM — The Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) will reopen its doors in accordance with public health recommendations and guidance on Saturday, July 18. This announcement follows Gov. Charlie Baker’s declaration last week that Massachusetts will embark on Phase 3 of its reopening.
Museum members, patrons and contributors to the #WeArePEM campaign — which provided memberships to more than 300 caregivers at North Shore Medical Center — will enjoy preview days on July 16 and 17. The museum will begin reopening Thursdays through Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and tickets will be available for purchase beginning on Thursday, July 9, at my.pem.org/events or by calling 978-542-1511.
PEM will move to the full regular Tuesday through Sunday schedule when doing so is viable.
Timed tickets will ensure that occupancy levels remain low — a perk for museumgoers who enjoy quiet galleries — while enhanced sanitation measures and environmental health protocols throughout the museum will make visitors feel confident and safe during their visit. Complete details may be found at: pem.org/safety.
“For more than 220 years, PEM has been offering experiences that ground us and propel us forward. During the pandemic, PEM has worked to be a beacon of light and inspiration for the community by sharing and encouraging creativity. Now it’s time to get back to what we do best: providing in-person encounters with art and culture that stir the imagination and spark important conversations,” said Brian Kennedy, PEM’s Rose-Marie and Eijk van Otterloo Director and CEO. “After months of quarantine, stepping into PEM’s soaring, sunlit spaces, and communing with art and with friends, will remind you why you love museums and why they are so important to our culture right now.”
In addition to PEM’s main campus, the Phillips Library Reading Room at 306 Newburyport Turnpike in Rowley reopens to the public on July 16. Environmental and public health protocols are in effect. To learn more and plan your visit, please visit: pem.org/visit/library.
PEM’s critically-acclaimed exhibition “Jacob Lawrence: The American Struggle” has been extended through mid-August before it heads on a national tour. Painted during the modern civil-rights era, Lawrence’s 30 intimate panels interpret pivotal moments in the American Revolution and the early decades of the republic between 1770 and 1817 and, as he wrote, “depict the struggles of a people to create a nation and their attempt to build a democracy.”
Also featured are two fan-favorite installations, “Charles Sandison: Figurehead 2.0” and Anila Quayyum Agha’s “All the Flowers Are for Me.” Both envelop visitors in an immersive realm of light and shadow, while providing opportunities for contemplation.
Visitors this summer can also experience PEM’s new wing, with its suite of galleries devoted to the collection and its adjacent garden,which will take you on a journey around the world and across time. This includes PEM’s “Maritime Art” collection, which is the finest of its kind in the country, framing the sea as an enduring source of opportunity as well as peril, a force that inspires creativity and innovation, and encourages engagement with the wider world. PEM’s “Asian Export Art” collection, foremost in the world, explores cross-cultural exchange as a catalyst for creativity and celebrates the interplay of commerce and creative expression.